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Synopsis

Midnight, Moscow. Three mysterious strangers gather at a seedy bar and spin stories about themselves that are so bizarre they cannot be true. The outlandish stories prompt even stranger questions. Why do humans strive to clone other people, if a new loved one cannot substitute one who’s dead? Where is the border between life and death, and how high is man allowed to raise the curtain to look over to the other side? Is science in fact a form of contemporary magic? These curious people, these strange questions, this bizarre night are only the beginning. They are only the start to the film, the most surreal story of all.

Director Ilia Khrzhanovsky’s audacious and provocative debut film is a startling and idiosyncratic creative vision of contemporary Russia. The strangers’ extraordinary stories form the background for one of the most unique journeys in contemporary cinema, a woman’s strange trip to a funeral in the Russian countryside to visit a village consumed by mourning, obsessed with strange rituals and crafts. What if you make a mask of a real person and then burn it in a macabre fire ritual? Is there a connection between these primeval superstitions and modern science? Between this unreal village and the strangers in the dark city bar? Is there a link between the past and the present? Can both these worlds of mystical shamanism and scientific modernity really co-exist in contemporary Russia? These worlds are so disparate that Khrzhanovsky broke the rules of accepted cinematic language and used two different editing rhythms, and two divergent concepts for both sound and visuals. Yet, a closer look reveals that these two worlds may be but clones of each other, reverse reflections, like positive and negative film, or like a mirror that reflects the past in the present…

Wall

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futurestar

12Dec09

if you are what you eat, the Russian culture is sifting in the sands. health, hygiene, community grid, what are those things in these bleak settings? it has all been downhill since communism took a powder. anything moving, breathing is fair game for dinner fodder. crass, base, and deliberate, this film revels in their common gutter.  
Picture of Special Agent Dale Cooper

Special Agent Dale Cooper

3Nov09

It's ok. It gets better towards the end, but overall it's a pretty dull movie  
Picture of Robert W Peabody III

Robert W Peabody III

25Sep09

4 (2004) DIR Ilya Khrzhanovsky SCR Vladimir Sorokin CAST Marina Vovchenko, Irina Vovchenko, Svetlana Vovchenko, 126 Min Many have tried and failed because this debut film defies description. 10/10   
Picture of Peter Dekkers

Peter Dekkers

21Aug09

I was able to completely enjoy this movie by watching it not with my total and utter attention. I think that would have been too much. I watched it while occasionally doing trivial things around the house and drinking wine. It was a complete experience, and I rank it among my all time favourite films. I did not make the Muslim reference mentioned. I will watch it again and pay more attention this time.  

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.

4

By Robert Abele on July 14, 2006
f your art film tastes lean toward orderliness and tidy metaphors, you could spend the two hours of Russian filmmaker Ilya Khrzhanovsky’s fearless and mesmerizing debut feature, “4,” cataloging foursomes
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4

By Manohla Dargis on April 7, 2006
The terminally bleak meets the hypnotically beautiful in the Russian cryptogram “4.” Directed by the newcomer Ilya Khrzhanovsky, the film opens with four dogs carefully positioned on a city street at night
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Another Russia

By J. Hoberman on April 4, 2006
A prime recent discovery on the international festival circuit, 30-year-old Ilya Khrzhanovsky’s first feature 4 is an immediate attention grabber. A quartet of dogs lounge around a beautifully framed
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Connect the Dots: 4 on Ilya Khrzhanovsky's "4"

By Lauren Kaminsky, Michael Joshua Rowin, Jeff Reichert, and Michael Koresky on April 3, 2006
Like trying to comprehend that you just got punched in the gut, watching Ilya Khrzhanovsky’s “4” requires that you live with it for a while in order to let the feeling sink in. This film does not imitate
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Reviews

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Untitled

By Tk on November 15, 2009

I liked it in the beginning, but toward the middle I couldn’t keep focused on it, and actually took a break for a few hours so I could go outside and garden and escape the thick atmosphere of the movie…  read review

Untitled

By MAO on June 24, 2008

I feel lucky to have found this movie. It’s like buried treasure. The movie was hypnotic and stylish and didn’t add up to beans but it kept me watching as hot as it is here in LA.

The thing…  read review

Untitled

By Kim Packard on March 12, 2008

Four dogs… and four machines, pounding on the pavement, appear at the beginning of the film. One of the dogs is hit by a car. Such juxtapositions of nature and technology suggest the clash between…  read review

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